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Poems by Jennifer MacPherson (Click here for website. New book out, see note at bottom.)
The Bone Poem for Yvonne
Bones waken me to midnight's open silence with their ghostly ache, suggest that it's time to bargain again with god
not the God of meek and gentle heart who rises - perfect - each Spring but an older, arthritic god who knows about bones, notes the hour when they begin to slowly grind each other, when skin thins and they stand like so many knobby sentinels.
This god counts poems we have yet to write like a rosary of bones clicking through his gnarled fingers, naming each one as it begins to split: tibia, fibula, radius, ulna ....
Older than benevolence, is this the god who shatters stone in rage, who makes seas swallow regiments, whose own bones mutter when he leans to listen?
as featured in Blue Unicorn
Crows Are Fighting In The Trees Again
I am wakened by their shadows against my bedroom wall. More crows than I can count, they swivel from limb to limb. Great swells of caws become quarreling squawks as displaced birds jostle feather and wing, displeased with whatever tree they circle, whatever branch takes their black, unbroken weight.
They haunt walnuts and scrub oaks lining our fence, take residence there by the hundreds in squalling winter weather. Even now they cluster thickly on broken branches deformed by a September derecho, the storm that changed the city's skyline forever.
When their wings scrawl curses across night's sky, houses will lose their north wall, stars will wink out, one by one. How long will the heavens burn? How far does the tree line reach before crows are only patches of black smoke and branches are sturdy, unbroken by storm?
Night after night I watch spousal abuse, tribal warfare, mating dance, each exacting detail shadowed against my bedroom wall. I must witness how the crows fight for the ineluctable branch that will answer all their hearts' mad questions, how they never find it.
As featured in The Café Review
That November Day
The morning that my mother died I saw the moorings of her life as child, woman, mother, wife transformed. She slipped, undignified, into a vessel on a bed, that body wired, twitching, slicked with sweat, her mind a derelict adrift at sea, her glazed eyes dead.
Her eyelids moved. Those blank eyes stared yet lacked all thought, all consciousness of life. I felt them stab my eye like knives that I should see her, pared to barest bone, convulsing, less than I could ever deify.
Bonsai
This is not a way I learned to cry: rotting sap the color of envy.
This is not a way I learned to heal: wound filling with stunted leaves.
This is not a way I learned to breathe: branches bending in my throat.
as featured in The Comstock Review
Some notes about the poet: Jennifer MacPherson is a founding editor of The Comstock Review. As of 9/07 we are pleased to announce the release of her new collection of poems, Rosary of Bones, by Cherry Grove Collections. It is available for order at through Cherry Grove and amazon.com (online) and Spring Church Book Co., PO Box 127, Spring Church, PA 15686, 1-800-496-1262.
Jenny's work has been published widely in such journals as Poet Lore, The MacGuffin, Calyx, Pearl, The Connecticut Review, Louisiana Literature, South Carolina Review, and Primavera. She is the author of a 2002 chapbook, Stuck in Time from Pudding House, which also published her Greatest Hits (2001), A Nickel Tour of the Soul (FootHills, 2004), and In the Mixed Gender of the Sea (Spire, 2004) which won the Spire Press Poetry Book Award. A former school psychologist, she lives in Syracuse, NY with her ocicats Tango and Samba. In her spare time, she is a gourmet cook, amateur gardener, ballroom dancer, and obsessive reader of everything. ((Click on book titles to go to publishers sites. updated 9/07)
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